Pubdate: Sun, 01 Aug 2004 Source: Sun Herald (MS) Copyright: 2004, The Sun Herald Contact: http://www.sunherald.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/432 Author: Kimberly Hefling, Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SHERIFF MOUNTS RURAL CAMPAIGN AGAINST METH LABS MONROE CITY, Ind. - Communities searching for innovative ways to stop the production of methamphetamine have tried everything from distributing locks for fertilizer tanks to training road crews to identify meth labs. Steve Luce, a sheriff from Knox County with a Wild West streak, dons a cowboy hat and hops on a horse. Since March, the sheriff and his deputies have gone by horseback through forest and farms three or four times a month, looking for the labs in places where cars and all-terrain vehicles cannot go. "It's my job to let them know we don't want them here," said Luce, a former heavyweight wrestler. Use of methamphetamine is soaring in the Midwest and South, especially in rural areas. It is a highly addictive stimulant that can be snorted, smoked or injected. The meth labs, consisting of kitchen appliances and glass jars, can be small enough to fit in a backpack; at least one found in southern Indiana was on the back of a motorcycle. Most of the ingredients to make meth are easily found at a supermarket, except for anhydrous ammonia, a fertilizer commonly found on farms. Ingredients handy Knox County is popular for meth labs because of an abundance of the fertilizer and rural areas that provide places to hide. In 1999, nine labs were found in the County, compared with 71 last year. Luce said it's not uncommon for 70 percent of the inmates in his jail to be behind bars because of meth-related crimes. "They get hooked on this stuff," he said. "It's evil." For farmers, meth also is a menace. Thieves stumble on their property to steal the fertilizer. They hide labs in the middle of cornfields, unknown to a farmer until the labs are run over by farm machinery. Some farmers are afraid to call police, said Chad Brown, a salesman at Grower Co-Op in Vincennes. "They're afraid they're going to come back," Brown said. "They feel like they'll tear up their equipment if they call them in." In 2000, a farmer in Flat Rock, Ill., was shot in the eye after chasing two men attempting to steal anhydrous ammonia from his property. He survived but was blinded. Luce said the horseback patrols are helping to win farmers' trust. He invited farmers to a hog roast before the patrols started and persuaded them to let him go on their land. Others agreed to lend seven horses to the program. Since the patrols started in the spring, he and his deputies have found 18 labs, 17 of which were inactive. "The horse definitely has an advantage. They can go where four-wheelers can't go," Luce said. Nose to the air On a recent day, Luce and his men saddled four horses and headed to Long Pond, located on abandoned strip-mined land. Deputies followed on four-wheelers bought with $7,600 in drug seizure money. As they navigated hilly, steep paths, Luce and his deputies looked for signs of meth, such as the smell of ether or ammonia. They stopped when they saw fabric hanging from a tree, knowing it could be a marker left by a cook. They didn't find any methamphetamine that day. But First Sgt. Dave Phelps, team leader of the clandestine lab team for the Indiana State Police, said the horse patrols are a practical solution to the meth problem in a state where the number of meth labs rose from 988 in 2002 to 1,260 in 2003. "So many are hidden out in the woods and fields in desolate areas," Phelps said. "If any agency really wants to aggressively look for them, you've got to look outside the box." Luce hopes the inroads he has made with farmers continue to yield results among his county's 40,000 residents. Just nine labs were found in Knox County in 1999, compared with 71 last year. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin